We’ve got our hands on brand new spy shots of the next-generation Range Rover. The new British luxury SUV, expected to be unveiled at the end of 2021, will sit on Jaguar Land Rover’s brand new, envelope-pushing, chassis known as the MLA platform. The MLA platform will underpin just about everything the company makes and will allow for a degree of electrification in every product. That includes fully electric vehicles, like the upcoming Jaguar XJ, or just mild-hybrids, like this is expected to be.
The rumor mill has been churning about a
4.4-liter V8 engine supplied by BMW going in the front-end of the 5th
generation Range Rover. Those same rumors suggest that this will have a small
amount of hybridization. With the popularity of electrified SUVs like the
Cayenne Hybrid ever-growing, it will be interesting to see how far JLR goes
with hybridization.
Yet more rumors have suggested that Land
Rover is working on a separate “Road Rover” to compete in the EV market, so the
Range Rover’s internal combustion engine could be safe for the time being.
JLR’s North American CEO, Joe Eberhardt, told Motor Trend back in March that
diesel powertrains would also be supported by the platform, so that might be
possible, too. Earlier spy photos also suggest that this new Range Rover will
get four-wheel steering, which should help with low-speed maneuvers and
high-speed stability.
The appearance is still a mystery, with
JLR laying the camouflage on thick. With the success of the Velar’s design
language and its adoption on the latest Range Rover Evoque, we would expect
that design language to spill over into the new Range Rover, albeit with a
little more off-road ruggedness to round things out.
The platform has come on the heels of
billion-dollar investments, so the success of the next-gen Range Rover will be
paramount to the survival of Jaguar Land Rover. Like, GM, whose CEO Mary Barra
said last week that its ability to build EVs will be informed by the success of
its pickup trucks, JLR may be depending on its classics to get it into the
electric age.

